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Development and Preliminary Psychometric Testing of an Adult Chronic Kidney Disease Self-Management (CKD-SM) Questionnaire

BACKGROUND: Self-management focused interventions to slow chronic kidney disease (CKD) progression are increasingly common. However, valid self-report instruments to evaluate the effectiveness of self-management interventions in CKD are limited. OBJECTIVE: We sought to develop and conduct preliminar...

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Autores principales: Smekal, Michelle D., Donald, Maoliosa, Beanlands, Heather, Straus, Sharon, Herrington, Gwen, Waldvogel, Blair, Sparkes, Dwight, Delgado, Maria, Bello, Aminu, Hemmelgarn, Brenda R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8671825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34925864
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20543581211063981
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author Smekal, Michelle D.
Donald, Maoliosa
Beanlands, Heather
Straus, Sharon
Herrington, Gwen
Waldvogel, Blair
Sparkes, Dwight
Delgado, Maria
Bello, Aminu
Hemmelgarn, Brenda R.
author_facet Smekal, Michelle D.
Donald, Maoliosa
Beanlands, Heather
Straus, Sharon
Herrington, Gwen
Waldvogel, Blair
Sparkes, Dwight
Delgado, Maria
Bello, Aminu
Hemmelgarn, Brenda R.
author_sort Smekal, Michelle D.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Self-management focused interventions to slow chronic kidney disease (CKD) progression are increasingly common. However, valid self-report instruments to evaluate the effectiveness of self-management interventions in CKD are limited. OBJECTIVE: We sought to develop and conduct preliminary psychometric testing of a patient-informed questionnaire to assess aspects of CKD self-management for patients with CKD categories G2-G5 (not on kidney replacement therapy [KRT]). DESIGN: Self-administered electronic questionnaires (multiphase). SETTING: Online. SAMPLE: Canadian adults with CKD categories G2-G5 (not on KRT) METHODS: The CKD-SM questionnaire was developed and tested in 4 phases. First, we used a content coverage matrix to identify potential questionnaire items based on existing self-efficacy questionnaires, self-management theories, and patient-identified priorities. Second, the draft questionnaire was reviewed by a multidisciplinary expert panel using percent acceptance to finalize the questionnaire. Third, we tested an electronic version of the questionnaire with patients with CKD, evaluating preliminary psychometric properties including internal consistency, face validity, and content validity. Finally, we tested the questionnaire within a CKD self-management intervention study and collected data on internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and pre-post responsiveness. RESULTS: We identified 22 potential questionnaire items for the first round of expert panel review. Thirteen items were retained in the first round. Eleven additional items were tested in the second review round and all were retained. Of the 24 items retained following expert review of the questionnaire, 21 had greater than 85% acceptance (content validity index [CVI], 0.75-1.00) and 3 items had 75% acceptance (CVI, 0.5). Thirty patients with CKD from across Canada participated in the pilot testing, and 29 patients participated in the CKD self-management intervention study. In the pilot test, several participants requested inclusion of a question that explicitly addressed mental health; consequently, an additional item relating to mental health was included prior to the intervention study (final questionnaire total was 25 items). Internal consistency (Cronbach α) was high for both the pilot (0.921) and intervention study (0.912). Preintervention test-retest reliability, measured with intraclass correlation coefficient, was acceptable (0.732, 95% confidence interval, 0.686-0.771, P < .001), and paired pre/postintervention comparison, measured with Wilcoxon sign-rank, demonstrated significant increases in self-management (P < .05) despite stable preintervention test-retest responses. Participants were satisfied with the content, wording, and design. LIMITATIONS: The sample sizes were small for each component of the analysis, and the sampling was consecutive/convenience-based. CONCLUSIONS: We used self-management theories, patient-identified self-management needs, expert review, and conducted preliminary psychometric testing to finalize a CKD self-management questionnaire for patients with G2-G5 CKD (not on KRT). The finalized questionnaire assesses aspects of self-management for individuals with CKD and may be particularly helpful as a tool to evaluate self-management interventions among patients with CKD.
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spelling pubmed-86718252021-12-16 Development and Preliminary Psychometric Testing of an Adult Chronic Kidney Disease Self-Management (CKD-SM) Questionnaire Smekal, Michelle D. Donald, Maoliosa Beanlands, Heather Straus, Sharon Herrington, Gwen Waldvogel, Blair Sparkes, Dwight Delgado, Maria Bello, Aminu Hemmelgarn, Brenda R. Can J Kidney Health Dis Original Clinical Research Mixed Method BACKGROUND: Self-management focused interventions to slow chronic kidney disease (CKD) progression are increasingly common. However, valid self-report instruments to evaluate the effectiveness of self-management interventions in CKD are limited. OBJECTIVE: We sought to develop and conduct preliminary psychometric testing of a patient-informed questionnaire to assess aspects of CKD self-management for patients with CKD categories G2-G5 (not on kidney replacement therapy [KRT]). DESIGN: Self-administered electronic questionnaires (multiphase). SETTING: Online. SAMPLE: Canadian adults with CKD categories G2-G5 (not on KRT) METHODS: The CKD-SM questionnaire was developed and tested in 4 phases. First, we used a content coverage matrix to identify potential questionnaire items based on existing self-efficacy questionnaires, self-management theories, and patient-identified priorities. Second, the draft questionnaire was reviewed by a multidisciplinary expert panel using percent acceptance to finalize the questionnaire. Third, we tested an electronic version of the questionnaire with patients with CKD, evaluating preliminary psychometric properties including internal consistency, face validity, and content validity. Finally, we tested the questionnaire within a CKD self-management intervention study and collected data on internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and pre-post responsiveness. RESULTS: We identified 22 potential questionnaire items for the first round of expert panel review. Thirteen items were retained in the first round. Eleven additional items were tested in the second review round and all were retained. Of the 24 items retained following expert review of the questionnaire, 21 had greater than 85% acceptance (content validity index [CVI], 0.75-1.00) and 3 items had 75% acceptance (CVI, 0.5). Thirty patients with CKD from across Canada participated in the pilot testing, and 29 patients participated in the CKD self-management intervention study. In the pilot test, several participants requested inclusion of a question that explicitly addressed mental health; consequently, an additional item relating to mental health was included prior to the intervention study (final questionnaire total was 25 items). Internal consistency (Cronbach α) was high for both the pilot (0.921) and intervention study (0.912). Preintervention test-retest reliability, measured with intraclass correlation coefficient, was acceptable (0.732, 95% confidence interval, 0.686-0.771, P < .001), and paired pre/postintervention comparison, measured with Wilcoxon sign-rank, demonstrated significant increases in self-management (P < .05) despite stable preintervention test-retest responses. Participants were satisfied with the content, wording, and design. LIMITATIONS: The sample sizes were small for each component of the analysis, and the sampling was consecutive/convenience-based. CONCLUSIONS: We used self-management theories, patient-identified self-management needs, expert review, and conducted preliminary psychometric testing to finalize a CKD self-management questionnaire for patients with G2-G5 CKD (not on KRT). The finalized questionnaire assesses aspects of self-management for individuals with CKD and may be particularly helpful as a tool to evaluate self-management interventions among patients with CKD. SAGE Publications 2021-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8671825/ /pubmed/34925864 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20543581211063981 Text en © The Author(s) 2021 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Clinical Research Mixed Method
Smekal, Michelle D.
Donald, Maoliosa
Beanlands, Heather
Straus, Sharon
Herrington, Gwen
Waldvogel, Blair
Sparkes, Dwight
Delgado, Maria
Bello, Aminu
Hemmelgarn, Brenda R.
Development and Preliminary Psychometric Testing of an Adult Chronic Kidney Disease Self-Management (CKD-SM) Questionnaire
title Development and Preliminary Psychometric Testing of an Adult Chronic Kidney Disease Self-Management (CKD-SM) Questionnaire
title_full Development and Preliminary Psychometric Testing of an Adult Chronic Kidney Disease Self-Management (CKD-SM) Questionnaire
title_fullStr Development and Preliminary Psychometric Testing of an Adult Chronic Kidney Disease Self-Management (CKD-SM) Questionnaire
title_full_unstemmed Development and Preliminary Psychometric Testing of an Adult Chronic Kidney Disease Self-Management (CKD-SM) Questionnaire
title_short Development and Preliminary Psychometric Testing of an Adult Chronic Kidney Disease Self-Management (CKD-SM) Questionnaire
title_sort development and preliminary psychometric testing of an adult chronic kidney disease self-management (ckd-sm) questionnaire
topic Original Clinical Research Mixed Method
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8671825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34925864
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20543581211063981
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